LinkPay vs Payhip
The short answer: LinkPay is payment links & checkout software you buy once as source code and self-host, while Payhip is a hosted option you rent. Payhip hosts your storefront and takes a cut on its free tier; LinkPay is owned checkout source you brand and run on your own gateways with no commission.
LinkPay vs Payhip: at a glance
| LinkPay | Payhip | |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Source code you self-host | Hosted service |
| Pricing | One-time from $149 | Recurring subscription |
| Ownership | You own code & data | Vendor-controlled |
| Customisation | Unlimited (full source) | Within product limits |
| White-label / resell | Yes | Usually no |
When to pick LinkPay
Choose LinkPay if you want to own the platform, avoid escalating monthly fees, customise deeply, or resell it under your own brand. It ships with everything below:
- Shareable payment links for any product or service
- Subscription and recurring-payment pages
- One-click and hosted checkout pages
- Stripe, PayPal and Razorpay integrations
- Invoicing with PDF receipts
- Customer and transaction dashboards
Frequently asked questions
Is LinkPay better than Payhip?
It depends on what you value: LinkPay gives you owned, self-hosted source code with no recurring fees, while Payhip is faster to start as a hosted service. Payhip hosts your storefront and takes a cut on its free tier; LinkPay is owned checkout source you brand and run on your own gateways with no commission.
Which is cheaper, LinkPay or Payhip?
Over time LinkPay is usually cheaper because it is a one-time licence from $149 with no per-seat monthly billing, whereas Payhip charges recurring fees that grow with usage.
Can I switch from Payhip to LinkPay?
Yes — because LinkPay is source code you control, you can migrate and recreate your workflows, then customise beyond what Payhip allows.
Get a quote or a guided demo
Tell us your use case and we'll send pricing, a live demo walkthrough and licensing options for LinkPay. Usually a reply within one business day (IST).